Friday, June 3, 2011

Farro Salad

Farro is a common Italian grain, and it's nutty-ness makes it quite hearty in a salad.  Our whole family loved this dish.  And again, it's perfect for the summer salad season!



1/3 C. plus 2T. extra-virgin olive oil
1 small yellow onion, quartered
1 small carrot, halved
1 celery rib, halved
12 oz. farro (1 3/4 C.)
5 C. water
Kosher salt
3 T. red wine vinegar
Freshly ground pepper
1/2 small red onion, thinly sliced
1 small cucumber, halved lengthwise and thinly sliced crosswise
1 pint grape tomatoes, halved
1/4 C chopped fresh basil.

In a large pan, heat 2T. oil.  Add the yellow onion, carrot and celery.  Cover and cook over moderately low heat until barely softened, about 5 minutes.  Add the farro and stir to coat with oil.  Add the water and bring to a boil.  Cover and simmer over low heat until the farro is barely tender, about 10 minutes.  Season with salt. Cover and simmer until the farro is al dente, about 10 minutes longer.  Drain the farro and discard the onion, carrot and celery.  Cool completely.

In a large bowl, whisk the remaining 1/3 C. of olive oil with the vinegar and season with salt and pepper.  Fold in the farro, red onion, cucumber, tomatoes and basil.  Season with salt and pepper.  Serve.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Chicken, Sausage, Asparagus and Mushroom Pasta

There is a lot to be said for simplicity in Italian cooking.  Let the ingredients speak for themselves.  This recipe goes the opposite direction--combining all of my very favorite Italian food ingredients in one dish.  It is AMAZING.

Though the recipe calls for the ragu to be served on pasta, I am serving leftovers on top of a slice of thick, toasted country bread.  Truly, it can stand alone.  The recipe makes a lot--a great dish to serve when company is coming over.

Make this soon.  It's truly phenomenal.


3 T. extra virgin olive oil
2 pounds boneless, skinless, chicken breasts, cut into 1-inch strips
1 pound Italian sausage, casings removed
2 T. dry Italian herb mix
To season--sea salt and ground black pepper

2 T. butter
2 C. yellow or red onion, medium diced
3 T. garlic, minced
To season--sea salt and ground black pepper

1 pound asparagus, ends trimmed and angle-sliced into 1-inch portions
1 pound mushroom, sliced or quartered
1 pint grape tomatoes, sliced in half lengthwise
1/2 C. marsala wine

2 C. parmigiano cheese, shredded or flaked
1/2 C. marscapone cheese, room temperature
1 C. basil, thinly sliced

1+ pound favorite pasta, cooked in salted water to al dente
1/4 C. purchased basil pesto

Warm the oil in a very large skillet over medium heat.  Add the chicken and sausage.  Season with the dry herbs, salt and pepper.  Once browned, remove from the skillet with a slotted spoon and transfer to a bowl.  Cover to keep warm.

Using the same skillet (do not clean), warm the butter over medium-high heat.  Stir in the onions and garlic.  Saute just until the onions are tender (2 minutes).  Season lightly with salt and pepper.

Add the asparagus, mushrooms and tomatoes to the skillet.  Continue to cook just until the asparagus is crisp tender, the mushrooms are soft and the tomatoes barely cook (3-4 minutes).

Off the heat, add the wine, return the skillet to the heat, scraping up any browned portions, cook until it is nearly absorbed.  Stir in the precooked chicken and sausage.  Cook, stirring, just until warmed through.

Just before serving, stir in the parmesan, marscapone and basil.  Toss the cooked pasta with the pesto (the pesto could be optional, in my opinion--there are already so many flavors to enjoy!).  Serve on individual plates or a platter, with a generous serving of ragu.

From cookandbemerry.com.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Ravioli Salad with Tomatoes and Basil

Since summer is right around the corner, and it will quickly be too hot to make anything that requires the oven, we are beginning to remember all of our favorite salads.  This is a ravioli salad, from my friend Tracy, that is hearty enough for any dinner.  It can be served with pasta right out of the water or at room temperature.

This time of year the tomatoes are out of this world.  This dish is so, so good!  A perfect combination of flavors and textures.


1 pound (500g) fresh ravioli (or tortellini)
1 pkg. cherry or grape tomatoes, halved
1 small jar artichoke hearts, drained and quartered
1/2 C. of your favorite olive (which you'll notice I omitted)
3 T. capers, rinsed
1/4 C. olive oil
lots of basil, torn (a couple of handfuls)
red wine vinegar
salt and pepper

Put tomatoes and artichokes into a large bowl.  Add the basil, olives, capers and oil.  Toss well.  Cook the pasta according to package directions and drain.  Immediately add to the bowl and toss gently with a spatula.  Add salt, pepper and vinegar to taste.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Zucca Ravioli con Cannella e Zucchero

This recipe is probably not one that can easily be made in the States, as I have never seen fresh pumpkin ravioli there. But this is one of my new favorite dishes.  If you ever happen to stumble upon them, or if one day you're feeling incredibly adventurous and want to attempt to hand make them (not hard, just time consuming), this is an absolutely delightful way to eat pumpkin ravioli.


500 grams (or 1 pound) fresh pumkin ravioli
1 T. butter
cinnamon and sugar

Boil pasta as directed.  When done, drain and put back into cooking pot, adding the butter to keep pasta from sticking.  Serve immediately on plates or in bowls, generously sprinkling cinnamon and sugar on top. 


Personally, it took me exactly 7 minutes from putting the ravioli into boil to serving it plated on the table. Delicious AND incredibly easy.  Does it get better than that?



Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Strawberries with Marscapone

Obviously, we don't know what will one day be served at the Great Wedding Feast, when eternity is finally ushered in.  But I'm betting that this little combination has to be in the running.  It is absolutely divine.  And ridiculously simple.



Strawberries, rinsed with stems still attached
1/2 C. marscapone cheese
2 T. milk or cream
1 C. powdered sugar

In a bowl, combine the marscapone, milk and 3 T. powdered sugar.  Mix well, adding a little more milk if it's too thick to stick to strawberry when dipped.

Serve family style.  Hold the strawberry by the stem.  Dip it into the marscapone mixture, then dip it into the powdered sugar, rolling it around to cover well.  Then take a bit of bliss!  Repeat.

Feta Pasta Salad

I hesitated on whether or not to post this recipe, as it's not exactly an "authentic" Italian dish.  But it was really, really tasty, and 'tis the season for pasta salads!  It comes from The Pioneer Woman.  If you haven't already spent hours pouring over www.thepioneerwoman.com, carve out some time today.  It might change your life.



1 pound short pasta (farfalle, penne, etc)
2 T. olive oil
1 whole lemon (more to taste)
salt
freshly ground black pepper
1-2 zucchini, sliced and cut into quarters
10 oz. grape tomatoes, halved lenthwise
6 oz. crumbled feta cheese

Cook pasta to al dente--I threw the zucchini in for the last two minutes--and rinse with cold water until completely cooled.  In a large bowl, dump the pasta and then drizzle with the olive oil.  Squeeze the lemon juice in and mix well.  Salt and pepper liberally (a lot of salt!).  Add the tomatoes and feta and mix it up again, adding more lemon and salt, if desired.  Serve cold.

Monday, March 28, 2011

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Buon Appetito!